How New York's Free College Plan Neglects Low-Income Students

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Tuition has become so expensive that going to college is a financial strain for nearly everyone who isn’t megawealthy. And although New York’s pioneering program to cover tuition costs at both two-year and four-year colleges will offer relief to the middle class, critics are disappointed that it won’t lighten the burden on many of the state’s most in-need students.

The Excelsior Scholarship program, which New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) signed into law Wednesday, ensures New Yorkers free tuition at the state’s public colleges if their families earn less than $125,000 annually. It will be phased in over the next three years, beginning this fall for families that make up to $100,000.

It’s a “last-dollar” program, meaning it’ll only cover what federal Pell Grants or other public aid won’t. Many students receive federal or state grants; nationwide, 36 percent of undergraduate students received some amount in Pell Grants in the 2014-15 school year, according to the College Board. Of those students, 27 percent received the maximum grant of $5,730 for the year.

And therein lies the biggest issue, according to social policy experts.

“Last-dollar free-college proposals such as the Excelsior Scholarship don’t address the college affordability inequities at play in our country,” Mamie Voight, the Institute for Higher Education Policy’s vice president of policy research, wrote in an email to The Huffington Post.

“For a low-income student who opts to attend a lower-priced school, such as a community college, a Pell Grant may already cover tuition costs,” she said. “Under the last-dollar model, no additional resources are given to that student. Instead, last-dollar proposals divert resources to higher-income students who may already be able to afford college, leaving low-income students struggling to pay other education-related expenses.”

It’s not just community college students who won’t benefit, according to Matthew Chingos, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute think tank who wrote an op-ed in The Washington Post when Cuomo first introduced the plan in January.

He used the State University of New York in Albany, a four-year college where tuition is $6,470 per year, as an example. 

“SUNY Albany students from families making less than $30,000 receive more than $11,000 in grant aid, mostly from Pell and a state-specific program,” Chingos wrote. “As a result, tuition is already free for them and they receive no additional benefits under Cuomo’s plan, despite the fact that they still have to come up with more than $10,000 to cover non-tuition costs such as rent and food.”

SUNY schools have some of the lowest college pricetags in the country, but the university estimates that a student can expect to pay nearly $25,000 a year once rent, food, textbooks, transportation, personal expenses and other student fees are accounted for. 

Conversely, the free tuition plans touted on the campaign trail by 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton and outlined by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) in the College for All Act are both “first-dollar” plans. That means they would cover all of qualifying students’ tuition and allow young people to apply other grants to non-tuition costs. 

To Cuomo’s credit, he has always been clear that the Excelsior Scholarship is designed to help middle-class families too wealthy to qualify for federal and state aid but not wealthy enough to afford the cost of college. College tuition ― for all types of schools, including public and private ― increased 12-fold between 1978 and 2012, while wages stagnated

“We should make college affordable, college should be accessible, college should be free for middle-class families in this nation,” Cuomo said at Wednesday’s signing. “So every middle-class family can go to college.”

Last-dollar free-college proposals such as the Excelsior Scholarship don’t address the college affordability inequities at play in our country.
Mamie Voight

The “last-dollar” structure isn’t the only element of New York’s plan that may exclude lower-income students, many of whom need to hold down jobs during the school year. To qualify for a tuition-free education, students must attend school full-time and complete their degree within four years. More than 90 percent of current students at the state’s community colleges and 60 percent at four-year colleges don’t fit that bill, The New York Times noted. 

That policy is aimed at helping students graduate, said Tom Sugar, president of the nonprofit Complete College America.

“The program’s 30-credit requirement ― which has been criticized by some ― is a research-proven strategy to raise GPAs, increase retention rates and ultimately boost college completion in the state,” he said in a statement to HuffPost. 

Sixty percent of students enrolled full-time in four-year colleges graduate within eight years, according to Sugar’s organization. Just over 24 percent of part-time students finish school in that same amount of time. Similarly, the nonprofit found that less than half as many part-time students graduate from two-year programs within four years as do full-time students. 

Another criticism levied at the Excelsior Scholarship addresses all students. A late addition to the plan stipulates that students who accept the scholarship must live and work in New York after graduation for as many years as they received the funds. If they don’t, their once-covered tuition will be converted to student loans they must repay. 

“Students may not understand what they are getting into when they accept the money,” Tom Hilliard, a senior researcher at the Center for an Urban Future, wrote. “And, to be clear, they are not simply agreeing to live in New York … after graduation. They are also agreeing to work in New York. So a graduate who lives in Chatham and four years later gets a summer job in Pittsfield could suddenly face a student loan burden of up to $27,500.”

Cuomo justified this requirement on Monday during a call with reporters, explaining that students who take advantage of this opportunity should remain an asset to the state.

“Why should New Yorkers pay for your college education, and then you pick up and move to California?” he asked. 

But such a clause should come with come with “workforce alignment strategies that ensure graduates have ample opportunities to pursue meaningful employment,” Voight said. “Policymakers must guard against restrictions that stifle mobility, as well as career and economic advancement, and hold low-income students back from being as successful and nimble in the workforce as they could be.”

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7 Signs Your Relationship Will Go The Distance, According To Experts

A strong relationship is a marathon, not a sprint. 

Some couples start off hot and heavy, but fizzle out over time. Others with a slow-but-steady burn can last decades or even a lifetime.

We asked relationship experts to tell us what common threads they notice among healthy, long-lasting relationships versus short, fleeting ones. See what they had to say below: 

1. You can laugh at yourself and each other. 

“I need to be clear here: I’m not talking about the scornful, contempt-filled laughter that is all about feeling superior and rejecting the other person. That can do serious damage over time. I’m talking about the self-effacing, I-don’t-take-myself-too-seriously sort of laughter that points out the quirks in ourselves, our partners, and our relationship while keeping it light. It’s when people can smile and rib one another about their favorite movie, shake their head and laugh about bad decisions they made in the past, and own up to their own selfishness from time to time.” ― Ryan Howes, psychologist

2. You find little ways to express your love every day. 

“Having sex is easy. Being loving every day isn’t always. Showing your partner you care, appreciate, and value them can be done in many small, day-to-day ways. Little things add up, like making him a cup of coffee every morning or telling her you appreciate how hard she works. When these caring gestures become habits, it’s a sign a relationship is more likely to last.” ― Kurt Smith, therapist who specializes in counseling for men

3. You’re on the same page where it matters most. 

“One good sign your relationship will last: your basic values are closely in sync. Research shows in general that the more similar partners are on the most important things in life -– such as religion, money, whether to have children and how to raise them –- the more likely they are to wind up together for life. That’s why it’s good early in a relationship to have a serious ‘values discussion,’ because this basic orientation toward what matters most is unlikely to change.”― Karl Pillemer, professor of human development at Cornell University and author of 30 Lessons for Loving

4. You give each other the benefit of the doubt. 

“This means that even if your partner did something that seems insensitive or unkind, like show up late for your big night, you assume that their intentions are good and that they are not trying to hurt you on purpose. Instead of looking for blame, you share how you feel and see if there’s a way to do it differently in the future. Or if they are going to always be late, find some acceptance for who you chose.” ― Celeste Hirschman, sex expert and author of Making Love Real

5. You don’t keep score. 

“Ideally, partners in a relationship do loving things for one another without expecting anything in return. They give freely, because giving to one another is reward enough. But that isn’t always the case. Many couples find themselves giving to the other in order to receive the same treatment in return. The problem is more than just a focus on giving in order to get: it’s when the arguments about ‘What you’re not doing for me’ start and partners start rolling out the scorecards: ‘I did the dishes five times last week!’ or ‘You’ve gone out with your friends five times since the last time I went.’ Instead of keeping score and waiting for the partner to make things fair for you, how about you just ask for what you want? Like, ‘I know we both hate doing the dishes, but how about we alternate weeks?’” ― Howes

6. You tackle problems together instead of avoiding them.  

“Tackling problems head-on is a sure sign of relationship health. Problems are part of life and don’t have to be viewed as something bad to be avoided. They can be opportunities to grow and strengthen your connection and commitment to each other. It takes courage to address problems, but the reward is a stronger, more secure relationship.”― Smith 

7. You each take responsibility for your mistakes. 

“If each person is able to take responsibility for their part in challenging dynamics and admit when they are doing something from an upset or protective place instead of their calm, connected place, it makes a huge difference. Imagine one person saying, ‘I know when I get really upset I chase after you and that can be overwhelming’ and then the other one saying, ‘Yeah, it can, and I know I can shut down sometimes and that can be really scary for you.’ That’s a relationship that can last.” ― Danielle Harel, sex expert and author of Making Love Real

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GM's self-driving car operation in San Francisco will keep growing

Every carmaker is pushing to develop autonomous vehicles, and GM is no different. Despite having tech rated in second place by Navigant Research and the announcement of a Super Cruise-equipped Cadillac on the way, the company will do more. Bloomberg…

Google Cardboard now supports WebVR on Chrome

Virtual reality has to be personally experienced to be understood and appreciated, but it’s not exactly the most accessible thing at the moment. Both in terms of equipment as well as content. Google Cardboard solved half the problem by making it almost too easy for anyone with an Android phone to get a cheap VR headset. WebVR solves the other … Continue reading

8-Year-Old Learns How To Drive From YouTube, Takes Sister To McDonald's

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This kid just had to have a cheeseburger.

Police in eastern Ohio say an 8-year-old boy drove his 4-year-old sister to a local McDonald’s in their father’s van after learning how to drive by watching YouTube videos.

The unidentified youngsters snuck out of their home in East Palestine at 8 p.m. on Sunday after their parents went to sleep. 

During the mile-and-a-half long journey to the fast-food restaurant, the boy successfully navigated railroad tracks and multiple intersections. Concerned witnesses called the police despite the fact that the young, unlicensed driver had remained under the speed limit and obeyed all other traffic laws.

On pulling up at the outlet’s drive-thru window, the boy used cash that he’d taken from his piggy bank to pay for the cheeseburger.

The workers thought that the parents were in the back, but obviously they weren’t,” East Palestine police officer Jacob Koehler told The Weirton Daily Times.

A family friend who was eating inside the restaurant contacted the children’s grandparents and the children ate their meal while waiting for their parents to pick them up.

No charges will be filed in the case, The Associated Press reported. Koehler later described the incident as “a good teaching point.”

“With the way technology is anymore, kids will learn how to do anything and everything,” he said. “This kid learned how to drive on YouTube. He probably looked it up for five minutes and then said it was time to go.”

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Anderson Cooper Stunned By Trump's Latest Comments On North Korea

President Donald Trump’s latest comments on China and North Korea left CNN host Anderson Cooper momentarily speechless on Wednesday night. 

The host of “Anderson Cooper 360” cited a Wall Street Journal report in which Trump claimed a 10-minute conversation with Chinese President Xi Jinping made him realize that solving the escalating crisis in the Korean Peninsula was “not so easy.”

That caused Cooper to briefly stammer. 

“I gotta say, I really am speechless,” he said. “I don’t know why I’m acting like this.” 

See his full reaction in the clip above.

 

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Jimmy Kimmel Suggests The Perfect Vacation Spots For Bill O'Reilly

Jimmy Kimmel had a good go at guessing just where Fox News host Bill O’Reilly is vacationing on Wednesday.

Amid sexual harassment allegations that prompted advertisers to ditch his show, O’Reilly announced Tuesday that he was taking a long-planned break

He didn’t reveal his destination. Instead, he asked his viewers to try to figure it out.

Kimmel gleefully joined in with the contest, suggesting a bunch of places where O’Reilly may be found over the next few days. “To hell, maybe? Is it hell?” guessed Kimmel, before dreaming up a few alternative locations. 

Check out the full segment above.

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Tokyo Auto Salon 2017: Stance & Stilettos by iPhone 7 (VIDEO)

Tokyo Auto Salon 2017: Stance & Stilettos by iPhone 7 (VIDEO)

Another year begins, and another 324,400 souls descend on Makuhari Messe in Chiba for the 2017 Tokyo Auto Salon  

Ladies of Tokyo Auto Salon 2017 (GALLERY 1)

Editor’s Note:
This is the first of two Ladies of Tokyo Auto Salon 2017 galleries. All images were shot on an Apple iPhone 7 Plus, which is pretty badass. 
Stay tuned for the Rides Gallery 1, coming in a few days, followed by more Ladies, then more Rides, too.

Autos of Tokyo Auto Salon 2017 (GALLERY 1)

Editor’s Note:
This is the first of two Autos of Tokyo Auto Salon 2017 galleries. All images were shot on an Apple iPhone 7 Plus.  

This year’s Tokyo Auto Salon was…interesting.